Beim googeln des Brother FB100 floppy Laufwerks habe ich folgenden link gefunden:
http://cowlark.com/fluxengine/index.html
ZitatThe FluxEngine is a very cheap USB floppy disk interface capable of reading and writing exotic non-PC floppy disk formats. It allows you to use a conventional PC drive to accept Amiga disks, CLV Macintosh disks, bizarre 128-sector CP/M disks, and other weird and bizarre formats. (Although not all of these are supported yet. I could really use samples.) ...
ZitatThis is the physical stuff you’ll need.
- One or more floppy disk drives. Both 3.5” and 5.25” work. One FluxEngine will even run both drives (but not at the same time, obviously). You’ll also need the appropriate cabling to plug the drives into a PC.
- A Cypress PSoC5LP CY8CKIT-059 development board, which is a decently fast ARM core wrapped around a CLDC/FPGA soft logic device. You can get one directly from Cypress via the link above for $10, but shipping can be extortionate depending where you are. You can also find them on eBay or Amazon for about $20.
- Either a 17-way header pin strip or a 34-way IDC motherboard connector (or one of the other myriad compatible connectors; there’s a billion).
- A suitable power supply. 3.5” floppy drives use 5V at about an amp (usually less) — sadly, too much to power from USB. 5.25” floppy drives also require 12V. An old but decent quality PC power supply is ideal, as it’ll frequently come with the right connectors.
- a Windows machine to run the Cypress SDK on. (The FluxEngine client software itself will run on Linux, Windows, and OSX, but you have to build the firmware on Windows.)
- Basic soldering ability.
- (Optional) Some kind of box to put it in. I found an old twin 5.25” Hewlett Packard drive enclosure and ripped all the SCSI guts out; this not only provides a good, solid box to house both my 3.5” and 5.25” drives in, but also contains an ideal power supply too. Bonus!
... hört sich echt gut an, vor allem, da ich noch ein CYCKIT-059 habe
-Jonas